4.4 Article

Rich Club Organization and Cognitive Performance in Healthy Older Participants

Journal

JOURNAL OF COGNITIVE NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 27, Issue 9, Pages 1801-1810

Publisher

MIT PRESS
DOI: 10.1162/jocn_a_00821

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation [PSI2013-41393]
  2. Generalitat de Catalunya [2014SG98]
  3. FI-DGR grant [2011FI_B 00045]
  4. CIBERNED
  5. VENI grant of the Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research (NWO) [451-12-001]

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The human brain is a complex network that has been noted to contain a group of densely interconnected hub regions. With a putative rich club of hubs hypothesized to play a central role in global integrative brain functioning, we assessed whether hub and rich club organizations are associated with cognitive performance in healthy participants and whether the rich club might be differentially involved in cognitive functions with a heavier dependence on global integration. A group of 30 relatively older participants (range = 39-79 years of age) underwent extensive neuropsychological testing, combined with diffusion-weighted magnetic resonance imaging to reconstruct individual structural brain networks. Rich club connectivity was found to be associated with general cognitive performance. More specifically, assessing the relationship between the rich club and performance in two specific cognitive domains, we found rich club connectivity to be differentially associated with attention/executive functions-known to rely on the integration of distributed brain areas-rather than with visuospatial/visuoperceptual functions, which have a more constrained neuroanatomical substrate. Our findings thus provide first empirical evidence of a relevant role played by the rich club in cognitive processes.

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